The Music Industry
Middlemen You
Do And Don’t Need.
Everybody wants a percentage of an artist before the artist is even making money. Managers. Playlist companies. PR firms. “Consultants.” Here’s who actually helps — and who survives off artist desperation.
Independent artists are constantly told they need a team. A manager. A publicist. A booking agent. A social media strategist. A branding expert. A playlist plugger. A consultant. A sync rep. A content coach.
Somewhere along the way, artists started believing they need an entire company around them before they even have momentum. The truth is simpler: most artists do not need more middlemen. They need more leverage.
Nobody Cares More Than The Artist.
That sounds harsh, but it matters. No manager is going to magically create ambition you do not already have. No publicist is going to save weak music. No playlist company is going to build a real fanbase for you.
Most middlemen amplify momentum that already exists. Very few create it from nothing.
A Team Should Remove Friction.
The right people help an artist move faster. They reduce stress. They open doors. They organize chaos. They create opportunities the artist cannot reach alone.
If someone is taking money without removing friction, they are not helping your career.
The Middlemen That Actually Add Value.
Managers
A good manager organizes opportunity, handles communication, keeps momentum moving, and protects the artist from drowning in logistics. But most artists hire managers too early.
If there is nothing to manage yet, you probably do not need one.
Entertainment Lawyers
One of the few people worth paying before things go wrong. Contracts, publishing splits, licensing, distribution agreements — artists lose ownership every day because they signed paperwork they did not understand.
Booking Agents
Valuable once demand exists. If nobody is showing up to your local gigs yet, a booking agent cannot magically force a market into existence.
Legitimate PR
Real press helps establish credibility and social proof. The key word is legitimate. Good PR gets your story in front of the right audiences — not fake “exposure packages” with meaningless placements.
The Industry Around Artists Is Full Of Noise.
Fake Playlist Companies
Most are selling vanity metrics, botted engagement, or temporary spikes that disappear the second payment stops.
“Industry Consultants”
Many sell motivation disguised as expertise. Be careful of anyone charging artists large amounts of money while showing little proof they helped build real careers.
Fake Exposure Packages
If the entire pitch sounds like “pay us and maybe somebody important will notice,” walk away.
The Best Leverage Is Momentum.
The artists who get the best managers, best booking agents, best labels, and best opportunities usually did one thing first: they built movement on their own.
Momentum attracts real industry support. Desperation attracts predators.
Before You Hire Anyone
□ What specific problem are they solving?
□ Can they show proof of real results?
□ Are they helping build long-term leverage?
□ Do they make your career easier or more confusing?
□ Would your momentum continue if they disappeared tomorrow?
Build Leverage First.
The music industry is full of people trying to attach themselves to artists before the artist understands their own value.
The smartest independent artists focus on building audience, identity, consistency, and momentum first. Once leverage exists, the right people start appearing naturally.
Do not build a team because the industry told you to. Build one because your momentum finally demands it.
Build Real Momentum.
Reviews, interviews, features, and consistent visibility help artists build the kind of credibility that attracts real opportunities — not fake industry promises.
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